El Dorado News-Times

Police in Belarus disperse another protest, detain scores

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KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Police in Belarus on Saturday detained scores of demonstrat­ors pushing for the resignatio­n of the country’s authoritar­ian leader of 26 years after an August election widely seen as manipulate­d.

Hundreds of students marched across the capital, chanting “Go away” to demand that President Alexander Lukashenko step down. They were blocked by police, who rounded up some and forced others to disperse.

Later in the day, hundreds of women, some holding white-and-red umbrellas in the colors of the opposition flag, staged their regular weekend march across the capital, Minsk. “You sang your song, it’s time to get off the stage!” one placard read.

The Viasna human rights center said more than 30 demonstrat­ors were detained.

Daily protests have occurred since the Aug. 9 election in which Lukashenko was declared the winner with 80% of the vote. The European Union and the United States denounced the vote as neither free nor fair and introduced sanctions against top Belarusian officials accused of rigging the vote and engineerin­g the post-election crackdown.

Earlier this week, the top opposition challenger, Sviatlana Tsikhanous­kaya, who moved to Lithuania after the election under pressure from Belarusian authoritie­s, put forward an ultimatum to Lukashenko: announce his resignatio­n by Oct. 25 or face a nationwide strike.

Tsikhanous­kaya hailed the participan­ts of Saturday’s rallies as a “big and bright force.”

Lukashenko, who has run the ex-Soviet nation with an iron fist since 1994, has accused the West of fueling the protests and relied on support from his main sponsor and ally, Russia, to dig in.

Belarusian authoritie­s tried to squelch the protests with massive violence in the first days after the vote, dispersing peaceful demonstrat­ors with stun grenades and rubber bullets, detaining thousands and beating hundreds. The crackdown drew internatio­nal outrage and helped swell the number of protesters, peaking each Sunday with over 100,000 on the streets.

Another such protest is scheduled for Sunday.

Since then, the government has scaled down the violence but maintained the pressure, regularly detaining scores of protesters and prosecutin­g top activists. Prominent members of the opposition’s Coordinati­on Council, formed to push for a transition of power, have been arrested or forced to leave the country.

Authoritie­s also have made methodical efforts to stifle independen­t media, regularly rounding up reporters covering protests and threatenin­g them with jail terms for taking part. Several journalist­s were detained on Saturday.

 ?? (AP Photo) ?? Police detain a woman during an opposition rally to protest the official presidenti­al election results in Minsk, Belarus, Saturday, Oct. 17, 2020. Police in Belarus on Saturday detained scores of demonstrat­ors pushing for the resignatio­n of the country’s authoritar­ian leader after an August election widely seen as manipulate­d.
(AP Photo) Police detain a woman during an opposition rally to protest the official presidenti­al election results in Minsk, Belarus, Saturday, Oct. 17, 2020. Police in Belarus on Saturday detained scores of demonstrat­ors pushing for the resignatio­n of the country’s authoritar­ian leader after an August election widely seen as manipulate­d.

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